DIFF Review…13 Assassins

Takashi Miike paints a samurai film for the ages with his gripping epic 13 Assassins. A gritty story about 13 Ronin tasked with killing the corrupt son of the Shogun, Miike sends a love letter to Akira Kurosawa that would make any filmmaker envious of such a compliment.

Right off the bat Miike recounts this true story by establishing a villain set for the record books in the form of Lord Naritsugu Matsudaira. His careless and detestable actions are close to breaking the peace that has been held for many years. Called to stop him is Shinzaemon Shimada and he’s to assemble 12 other samurai to take down Naritsugu. It’s 13 against 200 but to a well trained samurai those odds aren’t intimidating at all.

To samurai, loyalty and honor is the code they live by. But the gravity of what that means may be lost on Western audiences. Further how can they kill someone they’re sworn to protect (and he’s the Shogun’s son no less)? Miike attempts to tell more than just a “getting to know you” ensemble film with jaw-droppingly intense fight scenes. He tries, in part, to shine some light on and expand that philosophy of the samurai, that even Naritsugu says they “repeat like drones“. One line that particularly stands out is when Shinzaemon has assembled the ronin and tells them, “He who values his life dies a dog’s death. I will use all of your lives at my disposal“. Deep huh?

Forgive the slow approach, but in a film where you need to establish all the characters it is drawn out but still it’s done very effectively. Oh yeah there’s plenty of action and blood to be had (and coming from Miike, the later is a given), but Miike the slow boat approach is necessary to lay out one hell of a story. The plot, the players and even welcomed humor are all but reminiscent of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai and Kagemusha but delivered with Miike’s patented shock and awe style.

We’ve all seen samurai films but, like Nolan’s Batman Begins, Miike reinvents a common, if not overdone, storyline about a “group of ronin assembled for a mission“. It’s refreshing, well paced, exciting (read: bloody as you can get) and a fantastic film you will just love. It takes time to tell a true story worth telling with characters worth caring about (you are just going to love Hirayama and Kuranaga) but the pay off is an almost never-ending climax that you’ll tell your kids about. Miike does wonders with his film that would make Kurosawa very, very proud.

Click this link for more info and films in the 2011 Dallas International Film Festival.

Reinventing the samurai/chanbara sub-genre is no small feat. High praise indeed. I’m a huge Miike fan, so this one was sort of a no-brainer for me in the first place, but now it’s absolutely a must-watch. Hope it arrives in the Boston area sometime soon.

MarcC

I hope so for your sake (sake, not sake, Japanese humor, get it?) Andrew. This is a must see on the big screen! And to all those who have seen it, can anyone tell me just how they were able to close off the little town’s streets at the end? I don’t think that’s humanly possible:P

On behalf of Magnolia Pictures and the movie’s producers, many thanks for plugging “13 Assassins” … .. thanks also, on behalf of the distributors and producers, for not posting any pirate copies or non-trailer clips of “13 Assassins” and if you / your readers want good quality, non-pirated, previews, then the official trailer is available for fans and bloggers to post/ host / share etc at http://www.13assassins.com... .. for further details of on-line promotions for this movie and Magnolia / Magnet releases generally, check-out http://www.magpictures.com and their official YouTube channel at http://www.youtube.com/user/MagnoliaPictures.

Thanks again for your plug.

Regards,

WEB SHERIFF

FEATURED INTERVIEWS

NACHO VIGALONDO's style has endeared himself to many a genre fan. We talked to him about the large and small themes of COLOSSAL.

Visionary director TIM BURTON talks to us about music and creativity in MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN at Fantastic Fest 2016.

David Harbour gives us the low down on "The Upside Down" as we talk hats, homages, and Jim Hopper in Netflix’s STRANGER THINGS.

GOSEETALK EXCLUSIVES

HOLLYWOOD HITS: THE MUSIC OF JOHN WILLIAMS - Excerpts from the essay we contributed to The Dallas Symphony's playbill highlighting Tinseltown's greatest composers.

We sat with JAMES NEWTON HOWARD prior to his performance at the Dallas Symphony. To this day, it's one of the most insightful interviews we've ever conducted.

Oscar-winning composer MICHAEL GIACCHINO is one of the most talented and prolific musicians working in Hollywood. We spent 30 minutes with him to get a whirlwind retrospective of his impressive career.

Matt Schrader talks at length about his upcoming project, SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY – this definitive doc gets inside the mind of Henry Jackman, Steve Jablonsky, Harry Gregson-Williams, and dozens of influential composers.

GoSeeTalk and other filmcentric websites put together a little BACK TO THE FUTURE post to celebrate 3 decades of jigawatt joy the film (and series) has given us and the world. (This post has been featured on AlanSilvestri.com)

Get an exclusive look inside Dallas. TX based animation studio REEL FX and THE BOOK OF LIFE.

Director Jorge R. Gutierrez, Composer Gustavo Santaolalla, and the REEL FX Creative Team Explain Story, Music and Mexican Heritage in THE BOOK OF LIFE.

We are honored to be featured on CentralTrack.com as one of "Four Dallas Film Critics You Should Be Reading".

Symphonic Sounds of Dallas

Lots of events (both cinematic and classical) happening all the time at the world renowned Meyerson Symphony Center - home of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.

Do You Love Film Scores??

LA-LA LAND Records produces limited and rare releases of some of Hollywood's most famous and obscure film scores.